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Explore some of the most remote, fascinating, and unspoiled environments on Earth in two episodes from this collection of critically acclaimed National Geographic Specials. Our compelling filmmaking allows viewers to experience the world's last great places. Be captivated by exotic wildlife and see magnificent vistas few humans have ever witnessed.

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Explore some of the most remote, fascinating, and unspoiled environments on Earth in two episodes from this collection of critically acclaimed National Geographic Specials. Our compelling filmmaking allows viewers to experience the world's last great places. Be captivated by exotic wildlife and see magnificent vistas few humans have ever witnessed.

Explore some of the most remote, fascinating, and unspoiled environments on Earth in two episodes from this collection of critically acclaimed National Geographic Specials. Our compelling filmmaking allows viewers to experience the world's last great places. Be captivated by exotic wildlife and see magnificent vistas few humans have ever witnessed.

Explore some of the most remote, fascinating, and unspoiled environments on Earth in this collection of critically acclaimed National Geographic Specials. Our compelling filmmaking allows viewers to experience the world's last great places. Be captivated by exotic wildlife and see magnificent vistas few humans have ever witnessed.

Explore some of the most remote, fascinating, and unspoiled wild locations on Earth in one definitive collection of critically acclaimed National Geographic specialsavailable on DVD for the first time.

Loaded with the iconic photography of National Geographic, this issue is a vivid portrait of the globe divided into five zones of untrampeled, breath-taking landscapes, where beauty reigns. Whether temperate, equatorial, arid, polar, or coastal, each zone has unblemished corners that make us realize that wonders of the Earth still exist.

National Geographic Channel’s groundbreaking series Great Migrations explores the massive movement of animal populations around the planet. The project chronicles these inspirational, often harrowing journeys that are marked by unforgiving odds, and what it means to move like your life depends on it. Wildebeests, zebras, red crabs, Mali elephants, walruses, monarch butterflies, jellyfish, and whale sharks will all be on display, and the production crew traveled some 420,000 miles, filming hundreds of stories in more than 20 countries. Using new science and technology, the series reveals how animals make death-defying journeys to survive. Great Migrations is the largest undertaking of its kind in the National Geographic Society’s 120-year history. The seven-hour miniseries premieres globally in fall 2010. National Geographic’s net proceeds support vital exploration, conservation, research, and education.

A puffing steam train climbs into the Himalayas, a rolling rumble echoes over the holy waters of the Ganges, an astonishing five million commuters rush daily through the Bombay Victoria Terminusjoin National Geographic as we journey on one of the world's largest railways. Since 1853, India's railway has been a unifying force. Not only did it physically link distant regions, it also connected the myriad of castes, languages, and religions that comprise India. It's a rich history, riding the sumptuous Palace on Wheels through Rajasthan or the "toy train" to Darjiling, but sadly, the age of steam is dying. At the Black Beauty contest, the beloved steam engines are admired for the last time. From the driver in the steaming locomotive to the station master in the sleepy village, from the family traveling to a wedding to the commuters in the large cities, this great institution reflects the country itself. Many are the faces, and varied are the stories, on The Great Indian Railway.

Journey to the heart of the forests depicted in Rudyard Kipling's Jungle Book for an unprecedented look at one tigress's struggle to raise her cubs and survive in the wild. From high atop an elephant's backthe safest way to see these fierce creatures up closeNational Geographic's wildlife filmmakers track 12-year-old Bengal tigress Lakshmi and her three tiger cubs for two full years.

Explore some of history’s enduring mysteries in this three-disc collection featuring five National Geographic classics. Join the quest to reveal the real story behind Princess Anastasia’s death; investigate the mysterious disappearances of ships, planes and people in the Bermuda Triangle; and join the search for new clues to what really happened during the infamous escape from Alcatraz. From Amelia Earhart’s shocking disappearance to tantalizing new clues surrounding the identity of Jack the Ripper, National Geographic explores history’s great unsolved mysteries from a fresh perspective, revealing new evidence, theories and insights.

This stunning collection of words and images reveals how to find paradise in the world’s most wondrous placesand in its most ordinary if you know how to look. And no one knows subtle beauty and the joy of travel quite like National Geographic. Each destination here has been selected by our expert editors and is accompanied by crucial information on how to get there and what not to miss. Four chapters capture the best of every continent on the globe.

History reports that the mighty Inca were swiftly wiped out by a small band of Conquistadors. But new evidence is being unearthed that may help re-write history. Remains of those who died in battle have been discovered, and for the first time physical evidence is suggesting that Spain's conquest of the Incan Empire may have actually taken twenty years. Brought to life through CGI reconstruction and reenactments, the untold epic saga of decades of guerilla warfare and rebellion are finally revealed as National Geographic uncovers the truth behind the Inca's last stand.